Discovering a damsel in distress and the secret of Hurog both play a part in enabling Ward to figure out how to show himself as someone to be trusted. Undoing other people’s perception of himself turns out to be more difficult than Ward would like. Unfortunately for Ward, the damage done to him had enabled him to pretend to be quite dense. So when he dies at the beginning of the book, it would be fair to say that Ward did not feel like grieving. Until he had managed to damage Ward enough to affect his thinking, he saw Ward as his rival. Child-, spouse and animal-abuse were his main hobbies. What you need to know about Ward is that his dad was, to put it mildly, a monster. Its main character is Ward, heir to Hurog. Ward is a wonderful character, caught in his own trap, yet never quite giving up hope.ĭragon Bones is a stand-alone novel. And it fits with the dragon of the story. This is probably one of the better stories that Briggs has written. I don’t think I’ve ever seen an interpretation like that. Her books fall into the light entertainment category. The Hurog duology’s version of the Briggsian world-creation is placed in a world reeking of the middle-ages with all of its dragons, shape-changers, magicians and various other people. As you might have surmised from this blog she is quite a prolific writer. Patricia Briggs has written the Hurog duology.
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